Stems
in sentence
356 examples of Stems in a sentence
Maybe the collapse
stems
from lousy internal controls in financial firms that, swaddled by implicit government guarantees, lavish their employees with enormous rewards for risky behavior.
Or perhaps it
stems
simply from unreasoning panic.
Italy’s pivotal role
stems
from its position at the geographic divide between northern Europe’s prosperity and southern Europe’s crisis, and the intellectual and emotional divide between an open Europe and one trapped again by nationalism, prejudice, and fear.
I believe, however, that Korean extremism
stems
from the country’s geography and history.
But, again, the risk
stems
less from unpredictable shocks than from the slow erosion of institutions that investors trust to make an uncertain world more predictable.
While this view probably
stems
from France’s historical political and military prowess, it also reflects the country’s current interests.
It claims that its opposition to a European defense structure
stems
from its belief that NATO – and thus the United States – is critical to European defense.
Pakistan’s macabre association with the Taliban
stems
mostly from its constant effort to pressure its mortal enemy, India.
On the contrary, its importance
stems
from the fact that China holds the key to global adjustment.
Today, however, the real threats to the majority of the world's population
stems
from dangers almost unknown back then: poverty, hunger, population growth, migration, the environment, and the like.
This difference
stems
above all from strategic considerations, but it probably also contains a cultural dimension.
It also
stems
from an “us” and “them” mentality that similarly permeates research at the top Wall Street investment houses.
While policymakers have intensified their focus on trade and new technologies, they have missed an even more potent driver of inequality: the endemic rent-seeking that
stems
from market concentration, heightened corporate power, and regulatory capture.
Liberal over-optimism about the ease of integrating migrants
stems
from the same source: if society is no more than a collection of individuals, integration is a non-issue.
Likewise, polls and elections signal the ascent of populists across Europe, while financial markets’ vulture-like behavior
stems
from the cynical calculation that the EU lacks the wherewithal to restore its credibility.
Big banks’ ability to extort such an arrangement
stems
from an implicit threat: the financial sector – and with it the economy’s payment system – would collapse if a systemically important bank were ever pushed into insolvency.
Europe has an international image problem that in part
stems
from a complex institutional structure that non-EU countries find baffling.
His problem
stems
from the combination of his essence and style, which adds up to a brutal lack of coherence.
The opportunity
stems
from the fact that our doctors and nurses, our pharmacists and drug researchers, our biologists and biochemists are learning to do wonderful things.
Most importantly, China’s call for the introduction of a new reserve currency
stems
from its frustration with the failure of major governments – whether in the US or Europe – to govern their economic affairs with realism and good sense.
Unlike in the past, it
stems
neither from hegemonic ambitions nor from the sort of weakness that might tempt aggression.
Al Thani’s political audacity
stems
partly from Qatar’s enormous gas resources, which have allowed him to develop vigorous policies in all areas, especially in foreign affairs.
They are all part of an enormous multilateral trade deficit that
stems
from America’s unprecedented shortfall of saving – a depreciation-adjusted “net national saving rate” (combining businesses, households, and the government sector) that has been negative since 2008.
The current mess
stems
partly from adherence to a long-discredited belief in well-functioning markets without imperfections of information and competition.
The country is facing a severe shortage of money, which could lead to a serious financial crisis, in addition to the ongoing and dramatic military crisis.The EU’s difficulty in devising a concrete financial commitment
stems
from its dearth of financial means.
The EU’s difficulty in devising a concrete financial commitment
stems
from its dearth of financial means.
Most analysts believe that separatism
stems
from economic factors.
The predicament of Europe’s political establishment
stems
from a combination of irrational fear and vain ambition.
On the other hand, there is a growing sense that America’s current economic malaise – high unemployment and real-wage stagnation for low- and middle-skilled workers –
stems
from out-of-control fiscal policy, which has been taking ever larger amounts of resources from young savers and giving them to old spenders.
Perhaps some of the impetus for Indian women’s radicalism
stems
from the raw punitiveness with which rape is sometimes deployed – that is, as a weapon or a way to enforce social control.
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